Pathfinder Victorian England Last updated March 2009 By Paul Birkby and Beth Kois Library Catalog- Search for books by subject, title, or author. Library Databases-Use the keywords you have developed to locate information in the databases. For better searching, use the Boolean operators AND, NOT, & OR to pinpoint your search. For this project you will find the Literary Reference Center and Literature Resource Center to be helpful. Please see the librarians for user names and passwords. Free Websites: Charlotte's Web: A Hypertext on Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre: Charlotte's Web was constructed by students in English 434 (The Nineteenth-Century English Novel) at the University of Michigan-Dearborn during Winter Term 1997, 2001, 2003, and 2005. The Web consists of interlinked student research projects on a variety of topics, all of them connected to Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre. BBC-Website is hosted by the British Broadcasting Corporation. Take a closer look at the “Inside Victorians” section of this site. Fashion-Era-Contains information about changing role of women in Victorian times. Librarians’ Internet Index-Type your search term in the box. A good place to start is with the term Victorian England. Victorian England: Pathfinder from the James M. Bennett High School Media Center, Salisbury, MD. Victorian England: An Introduction: Brief introduction to the period by Dr. Christine Roth, professor of English at The University of Wisconsin, Oshkosh. Victorian Web- Site created by George P. Landow, Brown University Professor of English and the History of Art. The material for Victorian Web comes from Brown University's Context 61 which is a resource for courses in Victorian literature, however, the site does not only cover literature. Information on Social and Political Contexts, Economics, Religion, Philosophy, Visual Arts, Science, Technology, History and Gender Matters can be found as well. Each of these areas provides links to documents on a variety of subtopics for each subject. The section covering gender matters is particularly extensive and divided even further. The amount of information here is staggering but the site is so well designed that it's easy to find what you're looking for. Wolverhampton: The City and Its People-History of an English village and its citizens. Check out this page to find out more about how Victorian children lived.
Victorian England
Last updated March 2009
By Paul Birkby and Beth Kois
Library Catalog- Search for books by subject, title, or author.
Library Databases- Use the keywords you have developed to locate information in the databases. For better searching, use the Boolean operators AND, NOT, & OR to pinpoint your search.
For this project you will find the Literary Reference Center and Literature Resource Center to be helpful. Please see the librarians for user names and passwords.
Free Websites:
Charlotte's Web: A Hypertext on Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre: Charlotte's Web was constructed by students in English 434 (The Nineteenth-Century English Novel) at the University of Michigan-Dearborn during Winter Term 1997, 2001, 2003, and 2005. The Web consists of interlinked student research projects on a variety of topics, all of them connected to Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre.
BBC- Website is hosted by the British Broadcasting Corporation. Take a closer look at the “Inside Victorians” section of this site.
Fashion-Era- Contains information about changing role of women in Victorian times.
Librarians’ Internet Index- Type your search term in the box. A good place to start is with the term Victorian England.
Victorian England: Pathfinder from the James M. Bennett High School Media Center, Salisbury, MD.
Victorian England: An Introduction: Brief introduction to the period by Dr. Christine Roth, professor of English at The University of Wisconsin, Oshkosh.
Victorian Web- Site created by George P. Landow, Brown University Professor of English and the History of Art. The material for Victorian Web comes from Brown University's Context 61 which is a resource for courses in Victorian literature, however, the site does not only cover literature. Information on Social and Political Contexts, Economics, Religion, Philosophy, Visual Arts, Science, Technology, History and Gender Matters can be found as well. Each of these areas provides links to documents on a variety of subtopics for each subject. The section covering gender matters is particularly extensive and divided even further. The amount of information here is staggering but the site is so well designed that it's easy to find what you're looking for.
Wolverhampton: The City and Its People- History of an English village and its citizens. Check out this page to find out more about how Victorian children lived.